MikMod is a very portable module player based on libmikmod, written originally by Jean-Paul Mikkers (MikMak). It will play the IT, XM, MOD,
MTM, S3M, STM, ULT, FAR, MED, DSM, AMF, IMF and 669 module formats. It works under AIX, FreeBSD, HP-UX, IRIX, Linux, NetBSD, OpenBSD,
OSF/1, SunOS, Solaris and OS/2. It is controllable via an easy-to-use curses interface and will extract and play modules from a variety of
different archive formats.

OPTIONS

Options can be given in any order, and are case-sensitive. For the options which have both a short and a long form, the long form can be
prefixed by one or two dashes. Note that the settings in your $HOME/.mikmodrc will override the defaults shown in this man page.

OUTPUT OPTIONS

-d n
--driver n
Use the specified device driver for output, 0 is autodetect. The default is 0. If your installed libmikmod engine is recent enough
(>=3.1.7), you can also specify the driver with an alias, as well as driver options separated by commas. The list and driver aliases
and recognized options can be found in libmikmod's documentation.
-o[utput] 8m|8s|16m|16s
Output settings, 8 or 16 bit in stereo or mono. The default is "16s".
-f freq
--frequency freq
Set mixing frequency in hertz. The default is 44100.
-i
--interpolate
Use interpolated mixing. This will generally improve audio quality, at the expense of a bit more CPU usage. Note that this option
alters the behaviour of software drivers only ; hardware drivers are not affected.
--nointerpolate
Do not use interpolated mixing (default).
-hq
--hqmixer
Use high quality software mixer. This improves audio quality, but requires a lot more CPU power. Note that this option alters the
behaviour of software drivers only ; hardware drivers are not affected.
--nohqmixer
Do not use high quality software mixer (default).
-s
--surround
Use surround mixing.
--nosurround
Do not use surround mixing (default).
-r n
--reverb n
Sets reverb amount from 0 (no reverb) to 15 (max reverb). The default is 0 (no reverb).

PLAYBACK OPTIONS

-v volume
--volume volume
Set volume from 0% (silence) to 100%. The default is 100%.
-F
--fadeout
Fade out the volume during the last pattern of each module.
--nofadeout
Do not fade out the volume during the last pattern of each module (default).
-l
--loops
Enable in-module backwards loops.
--noloops
Disable in-module backwards loops (default).
-a
--panning
Process panning effects (default). This should be disabled (using --nopanning) for very old demo modules which use the panning
effects for synchronization purposes.
--nopanning
Do not process panning effects.
-x
--protracker
Enable protracker extended speed effect (default). This should be disabled (using --noprotracker) for very old demo modules which
use the extended speed effect for synchronization purposes.
--noprotracker
Disable protracker extended speed effect.

LOADING OPTIONS

-c
--curious
Look for hidden patterns in module. Most modules don't have hidden patterns, but you can find "bonus" patterns (or just silence) in
some modules.
--nocurious
Do not look for hidden patterns in module (default).
-p n
--playmode n
Playlist mode. The allowed values here are 0, to loop the current module ; 1, to play the whole playlist once ; 2, to play the whole
playlist repeatedly, and 3, to play the whole playlist randomly. The default is 2.
-t
--tolerant
Don't halt MikMod if a module cannot be read or is an unknown format.
--notolerant
Halt MikMod if a module cannot be read or is an unknown format (default).

SCHEDULING OPTIONS

The following options need root privileges (or a setuid root binary), and don't work under all systems.
-s Y|N
--renice Y|N
Renice to -20 if possible to gain more CPU priority. This option is only available under FreeBSD, Linux, NetBSD, OpenBSD and OS/2.
--norenice
Do not renice to -20 (default).
-S Y|N
--realtime Y|N
Reschedule mikmod to gain real-time priority (and thus more CPU time). DANGEROUS! USE WITH CAUTION! This option is only available
under FreeBSD, Linux and OS/2.
--norealtime
Do not reschedule MikMod to gain real-time priority (default).

-n
--information
Display the list of the known drivers and module loaders.
-V
--version
Display MikMod version.
-h
--help Display a summary of the options.

CONFIGURATION OPTION

--norc Do not parse the $HOME/.mikmodrc configuration file. This file contains your default settings, so that you don't have to specify
them each time you run MikMod. The file is read when you run MikMod and updated on exit. Using this option prevents MikMod from
accessing this file.

Some functions of MikMod are available through menus, in the playlist and configuration panels.
You can select commands in the menus either by moving the selection with the arrow keys and pressing enter, or entering the highlighted
letter corresponding ot the command you want to select.
Menu entries ending with a > character open a submenu, whereas entries ending in ... open a dialog box. You can dismiss a submenu either by
choosing a command in this menu, or using the left arrow key to go back, or switching panels.
In dialog boxes, you can move the focus from the input line to the Ok and Cancel buttons either with the "tab" key, or the up and down
arrow keys.
Also, if the statusbar is active (which is the default behaviour), it will contain a short help text describing the menu option currently
highlighted.

PLAYLIST MENU

When the playlist panel is displayed, pressing the return key will popup a menu. The menu commands are:
Play Continue list playback from the currently highlighted module.
Remove Remove module from the playlist.
Delete...
Remove module from the playlist, and delete module file on disk, or whole archive if the module is stored in an archive file. This
function asks you to confirm your choice.
File > This entry opens a submenu with four commands, "Load", "Insert", "Save" and "Save as". The Load and Insert commands ask you for a
filename, and replace the playlist with it (load) or merge it with the playlist (insert). No wildcards are allowed. The Save and
Save as commands save the current playlist in a file, by default ``playlist.mpl'', in the current directory. Note that playlist
filenames should end in .mpl, or they won't be loaded by MikMod.
Shuffle
Randomize the playlist.
Sort > This entry opens a submenu with sort commands. You can select a normal or reverse order, and then sort the playlist with one of the
four criteria: by name, by extension, by path or by time.
Back Discards the menu.

CONFIGURATION PANEL

The configuration panel lets you customize your MikMod settings, and save them. You can also try some particular settings without losing
your previous configuration.
Output options
This section lets you choose various vital playback settings, such as the output driver, the stereo/mono and 16/8 bit output set-
tings, the playback frequency, and the software mixer settings.
Playback options
This section lets you choose various module playback settings, such as the output volume, the processing of panning effects and
bacwards loops, etc.
Other options
This section lets you choose the remaining settings, such as the playlist mode, and various program settings.
Use config
This command activates the current configuration settings, but does not save them.
Save config
This command saves and activates the current configuration settings.
Revert config
This command reverts to the on-disk configuration file settings.

MikMod should recognize and extract the following common archive formats. However, to use each of these you will need to find the appro-
priate program(s) for MikMod to use to extract them. These are commonly available and you will most likely find them with this distribution
of MikMod.
zip Info-zip or PkZip archives, commonly used on DOS/Windows platforms.
lha, lzh
Lharc archives, commonly used on the Amiga.
zoo Zoo archives, quite rare those days...
rar Rar archives.
gz Gzip compressed files.
bz2 Bzip2 compressed files.
tar, tar.gz and tar.bz2
Tar archives, even compressed with gzip or bzip2.

MikMod is the result of the work of many people, including: Jean-Paul Mikkers, Jake Stine, Miodrag Vallat, Frank Loemker, Steve McIntyre,
Peter Amstutz, "MenTaLguY", Dimitri Boldyrev, Shlomi Fish, Stefan Tibus, Tinic Urou. A full list of people having worked on libmikmod and
MikMod is displayed when MikMod starts.
LOCATING NEWER VERSIONS...
The official MikMod and libmikmod home page is located on
http://mikmod.darkorb.net An European mirror is at:
http://www.multimania.com/miodrag/mikmod
New releases can also be found on the official ftp site
ftp://mikmod.darkorb.net and after a short delay on metalab (formerly known as sunsite) and its mirrors
ftp://metalab.unc.edu/pub/Linux/apps/sound/players and on hobbes, in source and OS/2 binary forms
ftp://hobbes.nmsu.edu/pub/os2/mmedia
Version 3.1.6, 5th July 1999 MIKMOD(1)